NBC News Host Question To Epstein Victims Is Raising A Lot Of Eyebrows
The media has spent years threading the name Donald Trump into the sinister fabric of Jeffrey Epstein’s sex trafficking empire—peddling speculation, insinuation, and outright innuendo. But when the victims themselves finally had their say, the narrative collapsed like a house of cards.
During a segment on NBC News Now, Hallie Jackson directly asked survivors of Epstein’s abuse whether they had ever seen or heard anything inappropriate involving Donald Trump. The response was swift—and unequivocal.
“No,” said the victims, audibly and firmly.
Not a single person pushed back. Not one alleged misconduct. And just like that, years of breathless media speculation evaporated in the face of a truth that doesn’t conform to the preferred storyline.
For those paying attention, this isn’t new. Trump’s connection to Epstein has always been painted in the broadest, most insinuating brushstrokes: a photo here, a party there, the implication that proximity equals guilt. But facts have always told a different story.
NBC: “Did anybody see or hear of President Trump himself doing anything inappropriate as it related to Epstein?”
EPSTEIN SURVIVORS: “No.”
pic.twitter.com/WJkxKm9VZg— Benny Johnson (@bennyjohnson) September 3, 2025
Trump openly admitted he once knew Epstein—but also made clear that he severed ties long before Epstein’s first arrest. He cut him off, according to his own account, after Epstein poached female staff from the Mar-a-Lago spa—some of whom were minors, including Virginia Giuffre, who later became one of the most prominent accusers in the Epstein saga. Trump’s break with Epstein wasn’t quiet or subtle; it was final and public.
Even Ghislaine Maxwell—the convicted trafficker and Epstein’s longtime accomplice—testified that Trump was never involved in anything inappropriate. In her own words, “The President was never inappropriate with anybody... he was a gentleman in all respects.” That’s from the inside, from someone who has no political incentive to protect Trump and every reason to cut deals where she can.
And yet, the media continues to scrounge for scraps. The Wall Street Journal recently alleged that Trump once sent Epstein a birthday card in 2003 containing a childish drawing of a stick figure woman. That’s the smoking gun? A third-hand report about a cartoon? Trump responded not with silence but with a lawsuit—taking on the Wall Street Journal, Rupert Murdoch, and the reporters who penned the hit piece.
Meanwhile, the Department of Justice just dumped over 33,000 pages of documents related to Epstein. Not a single one contains damning evidence against Trump. And let’s not kid ourselves—if any such evidence had existed, it would have been front-page news in 2024 when Joe Biden’s reelection hopes were crumbling. The DOJ had every incentive to use it. They had nothing.